The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability

Proportion of health care workers of those who believe that the work in progress threatens their health and safety is higher than the average in other sectors. Workers in health care facilities are especially exposed to violence in the workplace [1]. The aim of the study was the evaluation of the pr...

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Main Authors: Bula Santa, Deklava Liana, Reste Jelena, Lusena-Ezera Inese
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:SHS Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20185101013
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spelling doaj-8a4d0eecc5a744c488b40c58aac75ad82021-03-02T11:11:48ZengEDP SciencesSHS Web of Conferences2261-24242018-01-01510101310.1051/shsconf/20185101013shsconf_shw2016_01013The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work abilityBula Santa0Deklava Liana1Reste Jelena2Lusena-Ezera Inese3Rıga Stradiņš UniversityRıga Stradiņš UniversityRıga Stradiņš UniversityLiepaja UniversityProportion of health care workers of those who believe that the work in progress threatens their health and safety is higher than the average in other sectors. Workers in health care facilities are especially exposed to violence in the workplace [1]. The aim of the study was the evaluation of the presence of violence at work and determination of its effect on the working ability of health care sector workers. The study included the survey of 132 emergency department employees (doctors, physician assistants, nurses) from Kurzeme Region hospitals (Latvia). Questionnaire of violence in the workplace of the health care sector workers and the work ability index assessment questionnaire were used for the data collection. It was found that medical staff of health care establishments experience mostly verbal abuse (97%), less from physical attacks (36%), and intimidation/bullying (30%). The study found that medical personnel are aware of the changes implemented in the workplace (29%), there has been no change (33%), while the impact of changes implemented by medical staff at the workplace has not been experienced (47%). For personnel who have suffered from violence in the workplace, working capacity is generally lower than for the personnel that has not experienced violence in the workplace.https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20185101013
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bula Santa
Deklava Liana
Reste Jelena
Lusena-Ezera Inese
spellingShingle Bula Santa
Deklava Liana
Reste Jelena
Lusena-Ezera Inese
The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
SHS Web of Conferences
author_facet Bula Santa
Deklava Liana
Reste Jelena
Lusena-Ezera Inese
author_sort Bula Santa
title The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
title_short The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
title_full The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
title_fullStr The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
title_full_unstemmed The presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
title_sort presence of violence at work of health care personnel and their work ability
publisher EDP Sciences
series SHS Web of Conferences
issn 2261-2424
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Proportion of health care workers of those who believe that the work in progress threatens their health and safety is higher than the average in other sectors. Workers in health care facilities are especially exposed to violence in the workplace [1]. The aim of the study was the evaluation of the presence of violence at work and determination of its effect on the working ability of health care sector workers. The study included the survey of 132 emergency department employees (doctors, physician assistants, nurses) from Kurzeme Region hospitals (Latvia). Questionnaire of violence in the workplace of the health care sector workers and the work ability index assessment questionnaire were used for the data collection. It was found that medical staff of health care establishments experience mostly verbal abuse (97%), less from physical attacks (36%), and intimidation/bullying (30%). The study found that medical personnel are aware of the changes implemented in the workplace (29%), there has been no change (33%), while the impact of changes implemented by medical staff at the workplace has not been experienced (47%). For personnel who have suffered from violence in the workplace, working capacity is generally lower than for the personnel that has not experienced violence in the workplace.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20185101013
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